Preventable causes of death


Preventable causes of death are causes of death related to risk factors which could have been avoided. The World Health Organization has traditionally classified death according to the primary type of disease or injury. However, causes of death may also be classified in terms of preventable risk factors—such as smoking, unhealthy diet, sexual behavior, and reckless driving—which contribute to a number of different diseases. Such risk factors are usually not recorded directly on death certificates, although they are acknowledged in medical reports.

Worldwide

It is estimated that of the roughly 150,000 people who die each day across the globe, about two thirds—100,000 per day—die of age-related causes. In industrialized nations the proportion is much higher, reaching 90 percent. Thus, albeit indirectly, biological aging is by far the leading cause of death. Whether senescence as a biological process itself can be slowed, halted, or even reversed is a subject of current scientific speculation and research.

2001 figures

Risk factors associated with the leading causes of preventable death worldwide as of the year 2001, according to researchers working with the Disease Control Priorities Network :
CauseNumber of deaths resulting
Hypertension7.8
Smoking tobacco5.4
Alcohol use disorder3.8
Sexually transmitted infections3.0
Poor diet2.8
Overweight and obesity2.5
Physical inactivity2.0
Malnutrition1.9
Indoor air pollution from solid fuels1.8
Unsafe water and poor sanitation1.6

By contrast, the World Health Organization 's list only causes of death, and not the underlying risk factors.
In 2001, on average 29,000 children died of preventable causes each day. The authors provide the context:

Western societies

In 2017, The Lancet published a large study by Swiss epidemiologist Silvia Stringhini and her collaborators, analysing the impact of the most important causes of preventable death in Western societies. They estimated the number of years of life lost for each risk factor at the individual level and its contribution to preventable death at the societal level.
The multicohort study and meta-analysis used individual-level data from 48 independent prospective cohort studies with information on socioeconomic status, high alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, current smoking, hypertension, diabetes and obesity, and mortality, for a total population of 1,751,479 from seven high-income WHO member countries.
A limitation of many studies of health risk factors is confounding bias: many risk factors are interrelated and cluster together in high-risk populations. For example, low physical activity and obesity go hand in hand. People who are physically inactive tend to gain weight, and people who are severely obese have difficulty exercising. The unique advantage of the huge amount of individual data in the Stringhini study is that it allows the relative contribution of each separate risk factor.
The following table shows that, at an individual level, smoking is the single greatest risk of avoidable death, followed by diabetes and high alcohol consumption. At the population level, diabetes and high alcohol consumption have a low prevalence. Physical inactivity, smoking and low socioeconomic status are then the top three preventable causes of early death. Smoking, physical inactivity and low SES account for almost two thirds of all avoidable deaths.
Risk factorReferenceHazard ratioLife years lost
between ages
40 and 85
PrevalencePercentage of
deaths which
were premature
Physical inactivity1.592.3043.7%24.5%
Current smokingNever smoking2.084.6023.3%24.0%
Low Socio-Economic StatusHigh SES1.382.0635.4%17.2%
Diabetes1.793.999.0%6.5%
High alcoholModerate alcohol intake1.620.486.8%3.7%
Hypertension1.291.5434.0%8.8%
ObesityNormal BMI1.110.6820.9%Small

A puzzling finding is the small contribution of obesity as a cause of avoidable premature death. There are two reasons why obesity is not an important independent risk factor, as is often assumed.
  1. Being overweight is a risk for early death without correcting for confounding risk factors. Overweight is usually measured by the body mass index, which is much easier to measure than physical activity. Most studies only measured BMI, not physical activity, and did not correct for confounding.
  2. A major pitfall in many studies of weight and health is that "normal" and "healthy" are often confused. The WHO definition of "normal" adult BMI is based on a normal weight and height distribution of US citizens in the 1960s, not on the associated risk of death in 2023. A meta-analysis of the association between BMI and mortality in 230 cohort studies with 3.74 million deaths among 30.3 million participants found that the risk of death in adults is not increased between 23 and 30 kg/m2. An adult BMI of 18.5 kg/m2, considered 'normal' by WHO criteria, is associated with a 30% increase in all-cause mortality. However, this is a measure of correlation, not causation, so it does not disprove previously held notions of the relationship between health and weight.

United States

The three risk factors most commonly leading to preventable death in the population of the United States are smoking, high blood pressure, and being overweight. Pollution from fossil fuel burning kills roughly 200,000 per year.

Annual number of deaths and causes

Cause of deathNumber of
deaths
Percent of totalNotes
Smoking tobacco435,00018.1%
Obesity111,9004.6%There was considerable debate about the differences in the numbers of obesity-related diseases. The value here reflects the death rate for obesity that has been found to be the most accurate of the debated values. Note, however, that being overweight but not obese was associated with fewer deaths relative to being normal weight.
Alcohol85,0003.5%
Infectious diseases75,0003.1%
Toxic agents including toxins, particulates and radon55,0002.3%
Traffic collisions43,0001.8%
Preventable colorectal cancers41,4001.7%Colorectal cancer caused 51,783 deaths in the US in 2011. About 80 percent of colorectal cancers begin as benign growths, commonly called polyps, which can be easily detected and removed during a colonoscopy. Accordingly, the tabulated figure assumes that 80 percent of the fatal cancers could have been prevented.
Firearms deaths31,9401.3%Suicide: 19,766; homicide: 11,101; accidents: 852; unknown: 822.
Sexually transmitted infections20,0000.8%
Substance use disorder17,0000.7%

Among children worldwide

Various injuries are the leading cause of death in children 9–17 years of age. In 2008, the top five worldwide unintentional injuries in children were as follows:
CauseDeaths
per year
Traffic collision260,000
Drowning175,000
Viruses96,000
Falls47,000
Toxins45,000